13,697
edits
Changes
no edit summary
Seasonality played a minor role in the populations of microbes throughout the brewery, with ale yeast and ''Candida santamariae'' spreading from the fermentation and packaging area to the rest of the brewery from fall to summer (it was proposed that the warming from fall to summer played a role in the spread of ale yeast and ''Candida santamariae'' throughout the brewery). ''Micrococcus'' and ''Kocuria'' were found in more localized areas such as the floors and other surfaces in the barrel room, cellar, and packaging room. ''Acetobacter'' and ''Lactobacillus'' were found specifically in areas where a lot of wort or beer was being processed (conveyor belts and floors below the packaging equipment, hotside and cellar area sinks, and sample ports on kegs and fermenters). ''Lactobacillus'' was more common on surfaces where sour beer production was (fermenters and barrel surfaces), with floor surfaces having a more diverse mixture of LAB species.
Microbes with hop tolerant genes were found more abundantly in the fermenter and packaging areas (filler heads, below the bottling line belt, packaging sink, and a keg faucet) compared to microbes found on pellet hops (which were determined to not be a source of contamination), kegs, or barrel bungs, and was associated with where beer was being processed, particularly mixed fermentation and spontaneously fermented sour beer <ref>[https://elifesciences.org/articles/04634 Mapping microbial ecosystems and spoilage-gene flow in breweries highlights patterns of contamination and resistance. Nicholas A Bokulich, Jordyn Bergsveinson, Barry Ziola, David A Mills. 2015.]</ref>.
===Biofilms===